Literature DB >> 26936445

Intronic PRRT2 mutation generates novel splice acceptor site and causes paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia with infantile convulsions (PKD/IC) in a three generation family.

Axel Weber1, Jonas Kreth2, Ulrich Müller3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mutations in PRRT2 cause autosomal dominant paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia with infantile convulsions (PKD/IC). CASE
PRESENTATION: A previously not recognized intronic PRRT2 mutation (c.880-35G > A; p.S294Lfs*29) was found in an 18 month old girl with IC and in her mother with classical presentation of PKD. The mutation results in a novel splice acceptor site in intron 2 of PRRT2. Due to frameshift and a subsequent premature stop-codon the resulting transcript appears to render the PRRT2 protein non/dysfunctional and is the likely cause of disease in this family.
CONCLUSION: Our findings expand the mutational spectrum of this disease.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26936445      PMCID: PMC4776392          DOI: 10.1186/s12881-016-0281-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Med Genet        ISSN: 1471-2350            Impact factor:   2.103


Background

Benign infantile afebrile convulsions and kinesigenic dystonia are the hallmarks of paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia with infantile convulsions (PKD/IC, dystonia 10; OMIM #128200, #605751 and #602066). Onset of convulsions (IC) is commonly during the first year of life. Kinesigenic involuntary movements (PKD) develop somewhat later in early childhood. While convulsions usually resolve by 2 years of age, abnormal movements occur throughout life. PKD manifests as brief (less than a minute) but frequent (up to 100/day) dystonic and choreatiform attacks that are precipitated by abrupt movements. PKD/IC is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait with high penetrance. The disease locus was assigned to the short arm of chromosome 16 and a positional cloning approach has identified PRRT2 as the underlying disease gene [1-3] PRRT2 encodes “proline-rich transmembrane protein 2” and appears to be required for normal synapse function. PRRT2 mutations identified in PKD/IC to date include frameshift, missense and splice site mutations and most commonly a C insertion (c.649-650insC) (reviewed in [4]). Furthermore microdeletions at chromosome 16p11.2 are known to cause PKD/IC [5, 6]. Known splice site mutations affect the well established splice donor (GT) and splice acceptor (AG) sites. Here we describe an intronic PRRT2 mutation in PKD/IC that generates a novel splice acceptor site which alters the transcript.

Case presentation

The proposita was born after 37 weeks of an uneventful pregnancy to non-consanguineous parents. She weighed 2500 g (15th percentile), her length was 45 cm (3rd to 15th percentile) and her head circumference 33 cm (25th to 50th percentile). First afebrile convulsions occurred at age 6 months. They lasted up to 3 min and resolved spontaneously. Convulsions were mainly generalized, did not start focally, and were followed by muscular atonia and cyanosis. Muscle tone was normal between attacks. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis, auditory screening, EEG and cranial MRI were normal. Inborn errors of metabolism were excluded. She does not display developmental delay. No convulsions occurred during medication with oxcarbacepine (daily dose: 10 mg per kilogram of body weight). The proposita’s mother is affected by early-onset generalized paroxysmal dystonia. She was born in 1977, developed normally during childhood and did not have afebrile benign or febrile convulsions. At nine years of age she developed dystonic episodes triggered by sudden passive movements, stress, and fright. The involuntary movements lasted for up to 20 s. There was no infringement of consciousness during episodes. The attacks occurred daily. Muscle tone was normal between attacks. Medication with oxcarbacepine (daily dose: 300 mg) abolished attacks entirely. Although the maternal grandfather could not be examined, he is reported to have suffered from episodic dyskinesias as well, similar to the mother’s episodes in terms of age of onset, appearance and duration. Based on the mother’s statement no additional family members are known to have neurological symptoms.

Materials and methods

DNA was isolated from EDTA blood by standard methods (QIAGEN DNA-Blood and Tissue Kit). RNA was isolated from PAX-Blood using the RNeasy mini Kit of QIAGEN. Reverse transcription was performed following a standard protocol using SuperScript-III reverse transcriptase (Thermofisher) and random hexamer primers (Thermofisher). Dideoxy sequencing was performed according to standard procedures. Primers for amplification and sequencing of the genomic sequence of PRRT2 exons and adjacent intronic sequences were published previously [5]. Primers spanning exons 2 and 3 (RT-PCR) were: upper: 5′-CCCATGTGGCCTGTCAAC-3′ lower: 5′-CGCCTAAGTTGATGACGCA-3′ Multiple alignment of 100 vertebrate species and measurements of evolutionary conservation of guanine at position was performed applying the UCSC Vertebrate Multiz Alignment & Conservation tool at (http://genome.ucsc.edu/index.html). The multiple alignments were generated using multiz and other tools available through the UCSC/Penn State Bioinformatics comparative genomics alignment pipeline.

Results and discussion

DNA sequencing in the proposita and her mother revealed a G-A transition in intron 2 of PRRT2 (Fig. 1). This base change is located 35 base pairs upstream of the wild-type splice acceptor site (AG) of exon 3 [hg19: chr16:29825620G > A (PRRT2 c.880-35G > A; p.S294Lfs*29)] (Fig. 1). G at this position is evolutionarily highly conserved and identical in almost all vertebrates tested. No variant found generated a novel consensus AG-splice acceptor site. Furthermore, the G-A change is not listed in public databases (NCBI, DGV, dbSNP). Substitution of G by A at this position is predicted to result in the generation of a novel consensus splice acceptor site (AG). The Alternative Splice Site Predictor (ASSP) [7] assigned a score of 8.170 (confidence 0.456) to the new splice acceptor site. This was even higher than the score of 4.192 (confidence 0.330) calculated for the wild-type site.
Fig. 1

a Electropherogram of intron 2/exon3 sequence of PRRT2 in the patient. Note the G > A transition (arrow) c.880-35G > A. b Different sized wild-type (=179 bp) and mutant (=211 bp) PCR products on an ethidium bromide stained gel. Lane 1: molecular weight standard (MW), Lane 2: positive control DNA (human placental), Lane 3: negative control (water), Lane 4–6: DNA of the family members investigated. c Novel splice acceptor site due to c.880-35G > A and altered sequence of exon 3 of the PRRT2 transcript

a Electropherogram of intron 2/exon3 sequence of PRRT2 in the patient. Note the G > A transition (arrow) c.880-35G > A. b Different sized wild-type (=179 bp) and mutant (=211 bp) PCR products on an ethidium bromide stained gel. Lane 1: molecular weight standard (MW), Lane 2: positive control DNA (human placental), Lane 3: negative control (water), Lane 4–6: DNA of the family members investigated. c Novel splice acceptor site due to c.880-35G > A and altered sequence of exon 3 of the PRRT2 transcript In order to test the prediction of a functional new splice acceptor site we performed RT-PCR analysis using RNA extracted from the patient’s and her mother’s lymphocytes. As shown in figure, mRNAs of two sizes were found. One corresponds to the wild-type transcript, the second one is extended by 36 bases thus confirming that it was generated by splicing of exon 2 to the novel splice acceptor site in intron 2. Fig. also shows the one band found in unaffected persons, such as in a control and in the patient’s unaffected father (Fig. 1). Splicing to this novel site results in a frameshift and premature termination of the amino acid chain. Although the proposita and her mother carried the identical mutation, the patients’ phenotype differed. While the proposita displayed the classical picture of IC, followed by PKD, the mother and her father had PKD only. Different phenotypes in the presence of identical mutations of “disease genes” are a common finding in most monogenic disorders probably owing to modifier genes and environmental factors. In the case of PRRT2 mutations an entire spectrum of diseases has been described in addition to PKD/IC. These diseases include familial hemiplegic migraine, benign paroxysmal torticollis, episodic ataxia and paroxysmal non-kinesigenic dyskinesias [8]. Unlike the observations in the present family, it might be that at least some of these highly variable phenotypes are also associated with mutations in specific regions of PRRT2 in addition to modifier genes and environmental factors.

Conclusion

In conclusion we have described a novel mutation in PRRT2 that results in a larger transcript of the gene. Abnormal function of the predicted altered PRRT2 protein appears to cause PKD/IC probably by a dominant negative effect.

Consent

The family described in this report has provided us with their written consent to have their clinical histories published.
  8 in total

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Authors:  Carlo Nobile; Pasquale Striano
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Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2011-11-20       Impact factor: 38.330

3.  Characterization and prediction of alternative splice sites.

Authors:  Magnus Wang; Antonio Marín
Journal:  Gene       Date:  2005-10-13       Impact factor: 3.688

Review 4.  Role of PRRT2 in common paroxysmal neurological disorders: a gene with remarkable pleiotropy.

Authors:  Sarah E Heron; Leanne M Dibbens
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2013-01-23       Impact factor: 6.318

5.  Benign infantile convulsions (IC) and subsequent paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PKD) in a patient with 16p11.2 microdeletion syndrome.

Authors:  Axel Weber; Angelika Köhler; Andreas Hahn; Bernd Neubauer; Ulrich Müller
Journal:  Neurogenetics       Date:  2013-10-08       Impact factor: 2.660

6.  Identification of PRRT2 as the causative gene of paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesias.

Authors:  Jun-Ling Wang; Li Cao; Xun-Hua Li; Zheng-Mao Hu; Jia-Da Li; Jian-Guo Zhang; Yu Liang; Nan Li; Su-Qin Chen; Ji-Feng Guo; Hong Jiang; Lu Shen; Lan Zheng; Xiao Mao; Wei-Qian Yan; Ying Zhou; Yu-Ting Shi; San-Xi Ai; Mei-Zhi Dai; Peng Zhang; Kun Xia; Sheng-Di Chen; Bei-Sha Tang
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2011-11-26       Impact factor: 13.501

7.  Paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia caused by 16p11.2 microdeletion.

Authors:  Pichet Termsarasab; Amy C Yang; Jennifer Reiner; Hui Mei; Stuart A Scott; Steven J Frucht
Journal:  Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y)       Date:  2014-11-17

8.  Mutations in the gene PRRT2 cause paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia with infantile convulsions.

Authors:  Hsien-Yang Lee; Yong Huang; Nadine Bruneau; Patrice Roll; Elisha D O Roberson; Mark Hermann; Emily Quinn; James Maas; Robert Edwards; Tetsuo Ashizawa; Betul Baykan; Kailash Bhatia; Susan Bressman; Michiko K Bruno; Ewout R Brunt; Roberto Caraballo; Bernard Echenne; Natalio Fejerman; Steve Frucht; Christina A Gurnett; Edouard Hirsch; Henry Houlden; Joseph Jankovic; Wei-Ling Lee; David R Lynch; Shehla Mohammed; Ulrich Müller; Mark P Nespeca; David Renner; Jacques Rochette; Gabrielle Rudolf; Shinji Saiki; Bing-Wen Soong; Kathryn J Swoboda; Sam Tucker; Nicholas Wood; Michael Hanna; Anne M Bowcock; Pierre Szepetowski; Ying-Hui Fu; Louis J Ptáček
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2011-12-15       Impact factor: 9.423

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Authors:  Erik van der Wal; Atze J Bergsma; Joon M Pijnenburg; Ans T van der Ploeg; W W M Pim Pijnappel
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Review 2.  PRRT2 gene variant in a child with dysmorphic features, congenital microcephaly, and severe epileptic seizures: genotype-phenotype correlation?

Authors:  Piero Pavone; Giovanni Corsello; Sung Yoon Cho; Xena Giada Pappalardo; Martino Ruggieri; Simona Domenica Marino; Dong Kyu Jin; Silvia Marino; Raffaele Falsaperla
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  2 in total

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